Godsmack is made up of Sully Erna, Tony Rombola, Robbie Merrill and
Shannon Larkin. They made their bones with songs such as "I Stand
Alone" and "Running Blind." Now they are releasing their most ambitious
album yet, Godsmack IV. We caught up with frontman Sully Erna.
JUICY BANDS: What was the inspiration for Godsmack IV?
Sully: The inspiration was that it was time to do a
new record. We took a year off so we felt we had to do something bigger
and badder than we've ever done and, luckily, we have the luxury of
time to do that. We wanted to put on something special, something a
little bit different, something like we hadn't written before, but also
not have it lose the integrity and the toughness of Godsmack and what
we've built our career on. This record really represents that. It's
new, but it's familiar sounding. There's some stuff that you would
listen to and go, "I can't believe that's a Godsmack song." I think we
accomplished a lot with this record as far as trying to tap into a new
sound without fucking with the integrity of the band.
JUICY BANDS: Did you guys ever go, "Hey this doesn't really sound like a Godsmack song, maybe we shouldn't do that?"
Sully: Yeah, you know what we do? We go, "Wow, this
doesn't sound like a Godsmack song. Cool, let's try it" [laughs]. Who
wants to write the same record over and over again?
JUICY BANDS: It seems like a lot of people do.
Sully: Yeah, and I don't want to be that kind of band.
I want to be a band that's timeless. I want to listen to this record 20
years from now and go, "F*** that song's still cool." I'm hoping that
everyone else sees it that way.
JUICY BANDS: Did Faceless help you guys change and expand for this album?
Sully: Faceless was the first record where we
brought [drummer] Shannon [Larkin] into the band on. He brought some
new energy to the band which was really nice to have because we were
getting pretty burnt out from touring for so long. From there, things
started to expand for us, but I don't think it was until the acoustic
record that we actually started blossoming and really taking a chance.
To go from something like Faceless to this really soft
acoustic album is risky, but the audience really accepted it. We're not
trying to reinvent the face of music, we've never claimed that or we're
not trying to. I had this guest singer named Lisa Guyer, who is a good
friend of mine from New England that's probably one of the best female
blues vocalists I've ever heard, and she sang on IV with me.
We just took some chances on this record and it still holds that
toughness of Godsmack, but yet it's a bit broader and more melodic than
anything we've done before.
JUICY BANDS: Would you guys do an acoustic version of any of the new songs?
Sully: Sure, if we figure out what's acoustic
friendly. At some point we'll probably have the opportunity to do some
of it acoustically.
JUICY BANDS: When does the tour start?
Sully: We're going to start touring internationally in
June. We won't touch the States until September. We really want people
to live with this album a little bit and learn it because we worked so
hard. It took us over a year to write about 40 songs and then [we]
picked the best 11 that we could. We really think that if people have
some time with this that they'll see that it could be a diamond in
their collection. So we don't want to play the new stuff and set people
against it. We're going to starve America just a little bit until we
start touring the US.
JUICY BANDS: I read that Tool was an influence on the album.
Sully: What we were saying was, there's, like, a song
called "Living in Sin" that has Tool-ish kind of vibe to it, because
it's a bit epic-sounding. I don't think it sounds anything like Tool.
But then there are other songs, like "The Enemy," that sound like Bad
Religion stuff, or whatever. There are a lot of different textures on
this record.
JUICY BANDS: What's the concept of the video for "Speak?"
Sully: We wanted to do a video that had nothing to do
with the lyrics for once. We just wanted some killer eye candy and we
wanted to do the white man's version of the rock and roll bling video.
Instead of Escalades and Mercedes, we went and got, like, the most
killer dragsters and muscle cars and choppers and bikes. We blocked off
a street and I brought a bunch of my motorcycle buddies from New
Hampshire to come down and do these insane motorcycle stunts. We shot
the performance in Las Vegas. It was about rock and roll and fast cars
and chicks and burnouts and cool f***ing shit.
JUICY BANDS: Do you ride, too?
Sully: I've rode for my whole life, but I didn't do
any stunts on this video. I left it up to these guys. One of the kids
came in fifth in the whole world for best motorcycle stunts. It's cool
to see someone pull a wheelie at f***ing ninety miles an hour.
JUICY BANDS: What videogames do you guys have on the tour bus?
Sully: We always have a Playstation, but Tony
[Rambola] plays it more than anybody. I'm into it a little, but not too
much. I do more physical things, horseback riding, motorcycles and that
kind of s***.
JUICY BANDS: What movies do you guys have on the tour bus?
Sully: I usually bring classics with me. The Godfather, Scarface, A Bronx Tale. I love the gangster movies. I love comedies; I'm a huge Jim Carrey fan.
FOR MORE ON GODSMACK, BE SURE TO CHECK OUT:
Godsmack Official Site:
http://www.godsmack.com
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http://www.godsmack.com/store